Hawaii DOE, Teachers Union Agree To 6-Feet Spacing Rule
The teachers union and DOE came to an agreement that 6 feet of spacing in classrooms will be the norm, with anything less than that requiring a contract exception.
The Hawaii Department of Education has agreed to make 6 feet of physical distancing in classrooms and other meeting spaces in schools the required benchmark once public schools reopen their doors next month, the state teachers union .
The department had stated in and other leading up to the Aug. 4 reopening date that 3 feet of separation between desks if students were all facing forward was adequate and that students need not wear masks in this configuration.
The guidance had the backing of the state Department of Health, which OK’d this set-up in to DOE principals and administrators. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention a distance of at least 6 feet between students in schools.
The proposal was eviscerated by the Hawaii State Teachers Association, which implored its 13,700 members to flood the state Board of Education with letters of testimony voicing opposition 鈥 . The board on Thursday deferred approving a memorandum of understanding between the DOE and HSTA from two weeks ago, requesting the parties to meet again to resolve the issue.
Now, , schools that intend to place desks less than 6 feet apart must seek a contract exception no later than next Tuesday, from a committee comprised of two HSTA and two DOE representatives.
sent to HSTA Executive Director Wilbert Holck, DOE Superintendent Christina Kishimoto said guidance would be 鈥渦pdated鈥 to reflect the 6-feet distance benchmark. Her letter also indicated classroom distances between 3 and 6 feet 鈥渕ay be allowed with approved contract exceptions and additional precautions such as mandatory face coverings鈥 and that classroom teachers would 鈥渄etermine routines and rules related to wearing of face covering(s) in their particular classrooms.鈥
The between HSTA and DOE said schools shall maintain 6 feet or two arms鈥 length of separation between and among students and staff in meeting spaces and school grounds 鈥渨henever possible.鈥
鈥淲hile the MOU 鈥 doesn鈥檛 expressly prohibit configuring student desks at less than six feet, distancing of three to six feet should not be the norm or a starting point,鈥 the HSTA wrote Monday on its site, adding that 鈥渄esks placed less than six feet apart should be the exception to the rule鈥 with 鈥渃lear and specific reasons that would justify an exception.鈥
The DOE鈥檚 257 schools all their school reopening plans last week. It鈥檚 not clear how many of those schools the updated agreement could impact as schools scramble to create more space. The plans feature a mix of online and in-person instruction, and in some cases at the elementary level, exclusively face-to-face instruction.
The HSTA negotiation team said it met with DOE for several hours Friday and through the weekend.
鈥淲e would not have been able to continue this conversation without you,鈥 it wrote, in thanking its members.
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